Latest WAshington Dog Injury Insights

Do I Have to Report a Minor Dog Bite to Animal Control?

since

 1998

Before he represented injured people, J.D. Smith spent years as an insurance adjuster, underwriter, and defense attorney. He knows how carriers value a dog bite claim, where they cut corners, and how to push them to full value.

Short Answer

Washington law doesn’t fine you for failing to report a dog bite, but reporting it is still one of the most important things you can do, even when the wound looks minor. In Seattle, bites are reported to the Seattle Animal Shelter (SAS). In the rest of King County, they go to King County Animal Care and Control (KCACC). A report creates an official, dated record of the attack. The agency investigates, identifies the legal owner, and documents whether the dog has a prior history of aggression or a “dangerous dog” classification under RCW 16.08.070. That record can be decisive later, especially if the owner is uninsured and you have to show a pattern of behavior. Adjusters and defense attorneys also watch the timing of your report and your medical care closely.

Detailed Explanation

Relevant Washington Law

There is no statute that penalizes a bite victim for not reporting. But reporting connects you to the investigation that produces the records your claim may depend on.

Where the bite happened determines who handles it:

  • Inside Seattle city limits: the Seattle Animal Shelter (SAS).
  • Elsewhere in King County: King County Animal Care and Control (KCACC).

Why Reporting Matters Even for a Small Bite

A report does several things at once:

  • Creates a contemporaneous record. An official, time-stamped account of the attack is far stronger evidence than your memory months later.
  • Identifies the owner. Animal control can establish who legally owns the dog, which is the threshold for any strict liability claim.
  • Documents the dog’s history. The agency can note prior aggression or an active “dangerous dog” designation under RCW 16.08.070. If the owner turns out to be uninsured and you need to pursue a negligence theory, a documented pattern of behavior becomes valuable.

How Timing Affects Your Claim

Defense attorneys and insurance adjusters pay close attention to how fast you reported and how fast you sought treatment. The source guidance is direct on this point: any delay in reporting or seeking medical care beyond 24 hours tends to be used against you, with the defense arguing the injury was trivial or that you failed to mitigate your damages.

That doesn’t mean a delay destroys your case. It means promptness removes an argument the other side would otherwise use.

Practical Considerations

  • Report to SAS or KCACC as soon as you reasonably can.
  • Get medical attention quickly, even for a puncture that seems clean. Dog bites carry infection risk, and the medical record also dates your injury.
  • Keep the report or case number. You may need it to request records later.

When to Contact a Lawyer

If the dog has a history, if the owner is uninsured, or if the bite turns out to be more serious than it first looked, the animal control file becomes important evidence. KCACC in particular can be slow and backlogged, and a lawyer can issue Public Records Act requests to secure the file before it’s purged.

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